Tempers have flared in San Francisco because of a panorama of murals created during the Depression by a Communist painter who depicted Washington as a slave-owner and a killer of Native Americans. Critics of the murals say the portrayal of Blacks and Native Americans assert that their representation is offensive. Defenders of the murals say they are a historically accurate representation of our nation’s first president.
The Washington Post published a thorough account of the controversy and its resolution, written by Gillian Brockell, a staffwriter at the Post.
Victor Arnautoff didn’t just paint George Washington onto the walls of the San Francisco high school named after the first president in 1936. He painted Washington into them.
Arnautoff used the fresco technique he had learned from his mentor, the masterful Mexican painter Diego Rivera. First came the arriccio, an underlayer of rough, light-brown plaster on which he would sketch his design. Then came the intonaco, a smooth, white plaster high in lime. While it was still wet, he added il colore, ground colored pigments that gave his murals life. As the plaster dried, a chemical reaction with the air around it called carbonatazione fused the color into the wall.
That is why now, as the San Francisco Board of Education has determined that it is harmful for students to view the murals’ depictions of Washington stepping over a dead Native American and commanding enslaved men on his plantation, they cannot be put into storage or moved to a museum. The murals — 13 individual works spanning 1,600 square feet of the entry hall and main stairwell — are part of the school.
The board first voted to paint over the murals, but after widespread public outrage, it partially reversed itself. The plan now is to cover them with solid panels, although supporters of the mural object and insist any covering must be removable.
This is the story of the layers of history that will continue to exist underneath, whether the murals are covered by curtains, panels or paint. George Washington owned human beings before he ever made a decision to do so; he inherited 10 enslaved people at the age of 11 when his father died.
He purchased dozens more as an adult. And when he married Martha Custis in his late 20s, she brought even more enslaved people with her to Mount Vernon.
“There wasn’t much evidence prior to the revolution that he ever considered slavery to be wrong,” said Mary V. Thompson, a Mount Vernon historian and author of the new book “‘The Only Unavoidable Subject of Regret’: George Washington, Slavery, and the Enslaved Community at Mount Vernon,” in an interview with The Washington Post.
But then came the Revolutionary War, and for the first time in his life, Washington spent time in areas where chattel slavery was less common, even taboo. Plus, there was all that talk of “liberty” floating around.
“He’s leading a war where people are saying that people are born free, that freedom is a god-given right,” Thompson said. “And he’s not stupid. He can see the hypocrisy of owning slaves.”
In 1778, Washington sent a letter to his cousin confiding that he wanted to “get clear” of slave ownership. At the time, it wasn’t even legal to free them without a special act from the state legislature.
He stopped buying and selling enslaved people after the Revolutionary War, Thompson said. But when it became legal to free them in 1782, he didn’t.
And what kind of slave owner was he? He made efforts to keep families together on the same property. He criticized other plantation owners who were abusive.
But there’s also a record of him ordering an enslaved man to be whipped for walking on the lawn, Thompson said. Washington aggressively pursued runaways, and took steps to prevent his enslaved people from being freed accidentally while visiting free states. Plus, he was a workaholic, and sometimes expressed an obtuse dismay that the people he enslaved didn’t, by his estimation, work as hard as he did.
Washington left instructions to free the 123 people he owned when he died, which was a rare move at the time, and one that he hoped would set an example. But those instructions came with some big asterisks.
First, he stipulated that the enslaved people wouldn’t actually be freed until after his wife’s death. Martha worried this would entice them into murdering her, so she freed them a year later, largely out of fear.
Second, Washington had no right to free the 153 enslaved people from his wife’s estate, since they technically belonged to her first husband’s family; she only had “use” of them while she was alive.
This was a major complication, because the two groups had spent decades together. Many were intermarried and had children. With only half of a family freed, some founded settlements nearby, while others continued working on Washington’s properties for a low wage.
Speaking of properties, George Washington’s lifelong pursuit of Native American land is one of the least-explored aspects of his life, but it took up a lot of his time, as explored by Dartmouth professor Colin G. Calloway in his recent book “The Indian World of George Washington: The First President, the First Americans, and the Birth of the Nation.”
“Washington lived in a world where Indian people were present and almost omnipresent,” Calloway told The Post.
As a young man, Washington started his military career alongside Native American politicians and warriors much more sophisticated than he was.
As a landowner, he constantly sought to expand his holdings with Native American land, claiming or buying large tracts and then fighting protracted battles to prove the deeds he held legitimate.
As commander of the Continental Army, he ordered the destruction of indigenous communities when it helped the American cause. At the same time, he enlisted and promoted Lt. Col. Joseph Louis Cook — an African and Abenaki man also known as Atiatoharongwen, who led Oneida warriors against the British. He wrote of his gratitude to Cook several times and sent him gifts.
As president, Washington frequently received Native American diplomatic delegations at his residence in Philadelphia. When American settlers didn’t abide by treaty boundaries, he complained that only “a Chinese Wall, or a line of troops” would keep them from encroaching on Native American land.
Washington believed the government should offer a fair price to Native Americans for their land, and the “opportunity” to embrace “American-style civilization,” Calloway said, “but if they say no, then he describes them as recalcitrant savages who need to be ‘extirpated’ ” — which is an old-fashioned word for genocide.
There’s “an element of reality” to the mural showing Washington standing over the dead Native American, he said. But he adds, “You can’t tell people who are offended that the depictions of themselves and their people are not offensive.
When Arnautoff started work on the mural in 1935, he knew much of this history. But few at the time did — students weren’t generally taught in school that the first president owned people, nor that he had ordered the destruction of Native American villages. Not that Arnautoff had gone to American schools anyway.
As a young man, he was forced to flee his native Russia when he fought on the losing side against the Bolsheviks. He spent several years in exile in China before immigrating in 1925 to San Francisco, where he studied art.
In 1929, Arnautoff moved again, to Mexico, where he became an assistant to the legendary muralist Diego Rivera. There his anti-communist political outlook “made a 180-degree change,” according to his biographer, art historian Robert Cherny. For two years, Arnautoff worked with the communist-leaning Rivera on two major works, and the men had a lot of time to talk politics.
Arnautoff returned to San Francisco in 1931, smack dab in the middle of the Great Depression. In 1935, through a New Deal project, he got the commission to fill the brand-new George Washington High School with murals depicting Washington’s life and times.
Arnautoff studied Washington’s life carefully before painting his murals over 10 months. And according to Cherny, what he came up with was a “major counternarrative” to how people understood Washington at the time.
“Arnautoff has not presented the Washington of the cherry tree,” Cherny said in an interview with The Washington Post.
In almost all of the panels, Cherny explained, Washington is off to one side, de-emphasizing his importance in the events depicted. In a stairwell mural covering the Revolutionary War, Washington is tucked in a corner on a horse, “but in the center of that mural he showed four working-class men raising the new flag of the republic.”
In a mural depicting the winter at Valley Forge, Washington and other officers are dressed in clean, warm uniforms. Enlisted men are dressed in rags and freezing, emphasizing the class differences in the new nation.
Then there are the two murals that have caused the most controversy. In one, Washington stands to the side, listening to a report from a white slave overseer at Mount Vernon. The man gestures to the men in the center — enslaved African Americans shucking corn and bagging cotton. In the background, enslaved women pick cotton in the fields.
It was “a way of calling attention” to the split between Washington’s principles and actions, Cherny explained.
On the opposite wall, Washington stands with other Founding Fathers on a platform, one arm pointing westward. In front of him lies the body of a Plains Indian man, facedown and stiff, clearly dead but with no obvious wounds. Over him walk four white settlers armed with rifles, painted with black and white pigment against the mural’s otherwise vibrant colors.
“He and Rivera had used [black and white paint] previously to depict things they found outdated or in some way objectionable,” Cherny said.
The mural is an indictment of white America’s expansion to the West — to California itself.
These two murals are the largest, and Cherny said it is not by accident they are the first thing students encounter when they enter the school’s front doors.
“Arnautoff is depicting the two great injustices of early American history: slavery and the genocide and dispossession of the first people,” Cherny said.
Art critics hailed the murals when the school first opened; it’s unclear to Cherny whether they supported Arnautoff’s “counternarrative” or if it was too subtle to understand.
Arnautoff officially joined the Communist Party in 1938, according to FBI records. In the 1950s, he was investigated by the House Un-American Activities Committee for a cartoon he drew depicting then-Vice President Richard M. Nixon in an unflattering light.
In 1963, he returned to Russia, by then the Soviet Union, where he spent the rest of his life.
Three years after Arnautoff left the U.S., Dewey Crumpler first saw the murals. He was a junior at a rival high school visiting for a football game. As a young black man, he thought the depictions of people of color were “horrible,” he recently told Artnet.
Two years later, the Black Student Union at George Washington High School demanded their removal, saying the images of enslaved ancestors picking cotton and shucking corn were degrading. Local Black Panthers joined them. They enlisted Crumpler, by then an activist and art student, to paint a new artwork over it.
The divide over the fate of the murals was more generational than black vs. white. The San Francisco Examiner reported the local Negro Historical and Cultural Society opposed any changes to the mural, saying it was an “honest and truthful account of the condition of black people in colonial America.” The students pushed back, saying members of the historical society “don’t have to live with the murals every day.”
At a school board meeting, one female student shouted, “It seems to me you people keep reminding us that we were once slaves!
” As Crumpler remembers it, the arts commission was opposed to hiring “a kid” to make any changes, so, like Arnautoff had decades earlier, he headed to Mexico to learn more about mural techniques. He also researched Arnautoff’s murals and learned about their subversive meaning.
“At that point, I said very clearly that I would not be a party to destroying the mural,” Crumpler told Artnet. What he offered the student activists was to create “response” murals around Arnautoff’s work that lifted up achievements by African, Asian, Latinx and Native Americans throughout history.
The plan was finally approved in 1970. Crumpler finished them five years later, right about the time he finished his master’s degree in art. Unlike Arnautoff’s work, the response murals were painted on panels that can be removed. But they have hung unchanged in the school ever since.
Today he is an art professor at the San Francisco Art Institute — and he’s adamantly opposed to covering the Arnautoff murals. “My mural is part of the Arnautoff mural, part of its meaning, and its meaning is part of mine,” he told Artnet. “If you destroy his work of art, you are destroying mine as well.” Left: San Francisco school board president Stevon Cook has pushed for covering the Arnautoff murals. Right: Notable African American city leaders have come out against the measure after public outcry. From left, local NAACP president Dr. Amos Brown, columnist Noah Griffin, Rev. Arnold Townsend and artist Dewey Crumpler. ( Right: Eric Risberg/Left: Facebook/SC4SB, Right: AP) A controversy explodes: Carbonatazione Native American and black students, teachers and parents have never stopped complaining about the murals. They say the images reinforce stereotypes, make it harder to learn and traumatize students who have no choice but to view them day in and day out. At a recent school board meeting, a current student said she was sick of hearing classmates say, “I’ll meet you at the dead Indian.” Last year, there were about 2,000 students at the high school; 100 identified as African American, Native American, Alaska Native or Pacific Islander, according to state data. The majority — more than 60 percent — were of Asian descent. In December, the school board convened a “Reflection and Action Group” to evaluate the history of the murals and decide if they had a future. After four public meetings, the group recommended the murals be “removed,” even though that’s impossible. Half a dozen local activist groups endorsed the decision. In June, the school board voted unanimously — student experience came first, and the murals would be digitally archived and painted over. A few days later, conservative New York Times opinion writer Bari Weiss launched the murals into the national conversation as the latest example of “snowflakes seek[ing] a safe space.” School Board president Stevon Cook and vice president Mark Sanchez published a rebuttal to Weiss’s column in Artnet, saying, “Ultimately, our school board came down on the side of communities that we all know have had their priorities ignored when it comes to just about anything.” Even with Weiss’s invocation of the buzzword of the day, the school board is actually required to provide a safe place for students to learn. They also argued “those in favor of keeping the mural are predominantly of European descent, and those protesting the mural are overwhelmingly people of color.” But since then, some of the school board’s most prominent critics have been people of color, too. Former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown, who is black, compared activists who support the measure to “boorish” Trump supporters. Actor Danny Glover, an alumnus of the school, is against the measure. So is the head of the local NAACP chapter, who said the display “tells the whole truth about Mr. Washington being complicit in the slave trade.” Others suggested lawsuits and even a ballot measure to prevent the paint job. Cherny, the art historian, has gone to every public meeting. At one of them, he was shouted down by activists who want the murals gone. He is quick to say he cannot put himself in the shoes of students of color who are offended by the murals. But he also points out that those students aren’t given much opportunity to learn about the context or symbolism contained in them. There are no plaques with explanations next to them. There is no high school orientation class about them. In fact, California high school students don’t even cover the time period depicted. State educational standards designate fifth grade only for instruction on the nation’s founding. But at a school board meeting, board member Alison Collins disagreed, saying the murals were as outdated as 1930s textbooks. “We don’t teach reading with ‘Dick & Jane,’ and we aren’t using murals to teach our complex histories,” she said. After weeks of uproar, the school board proposed a new plan to cover the murals with solid panels. If they thought it was a compromise, the public didn’t see it that way. At an Aug. 13 school board meeting, those supporting the mural — none of whom were current students or teachers — said solid panels were still too much and that school board members were “infantilizers” who should be recalled. Those against the mural, which included current students and teachers, questioned why another vote was being held after the school board had already made a decision. One woman from the Mayagna-Seneca Tribe compared it to the country’s long history of broken treaties with Native Americans. Cook spoke last. Fighting back tears, he urged the audience to let the board get back to work after the vote, reminding them of the district’s chronic absenteeism problem, and that 1 in 25 San Francisco students is homeless. “I think everyone here agrees that the murals depict a racist history,” he said. “No!” a man shouted. The school board voted 4-3 to reverse its prior decision and cover the murals with panels. The plan must now pass muster with the California Office of Historic Preservation, which oversees the protection of “historic resources.” After the vote, nearly everyone in the audience got up and left. Read more Retropolis: Historic mansion on land George Washington once owned is set to be demolished Some white people don’t want to hear about slavery at plantations built by slaves George Washington’s Supreme Court nominees were confirmed in two days. Only half showed up to work. Powhatan and his people: The 15,000 American Indians shoved aside by Jamestown’s settlers Gillian Brockell is a staff writer for The Washington Post’s history blog, Retropolis. She has been at The Post since 2013 and previously worked as a video editor. Democracy Dies in Darkness
Wow, what an incredibly thorough and nuanced account of this.
It is such a joy to read something that makes it clear how difficult these issues are. I am so tired of reading articles that make it seem as if there is an easy solution and the only reason that the person in charge isn’t doing that easy solution is because they are (insert attack that leader is a tool of whatever group you decide is evil).
Truly, I do not know what the right answer is here. I am truly astonished and impressed that a Communist artist in the 1930s could make a mural that was so critical of one of the most praised founding father in this country. In a school, no less!
And yet I understand that it is possible for the very people whose oppression by that founding father is depicted in the mural to feel that the depictions of their ancestors are offensive.
Seems like the school tried to do a good thing when they added other murals later on.
I concluded from this article that I am glad I am not the one making a decision because whether the decision is to keep or remove (or hide) the mural, that decision is going to be absolutely and utterly the wrong one. And the right one.
Speaking from San Francisco: I’m a semi-contrarian on this issue. I absolutely oppose destroying the murals. But I think the students who raise the issue – which has been happening since the ’60s, the Washington Post article notes from its lofty 3,000-mile distance – need to be taken seriously and their views acknowledged. I am not sure what solution I favor; I’m torn about covering the murals.
(Also, by the way, I think the national attention and debate about this are a really great thing; this is what art should be doing.)
The students who raised the issue have been mocked and sneered at by powerful voices across the land. As noted, a New York Times op-ed disdained them as “snowflakes seek[ing] a safe space.” As also noted, former S.F. Mayor Willie Brown, who now writes a column in the Sunday San Francisco Chronicle, compared them in his column to “ ‘boorish’ Trump supporters.” My main message is to listen to those students, try to hear them and stop heaping them with sneering contempt – they’re kids, and they’re members of oppressed groups.
I’ve gotten in discussions about this in various places, in which I’m always a lone voice and usually treated with utter disdain. I’m always hit with arguments that don’t fully address the issue, though. Here are some of those arguments and my responses:
This work doesn’t glorify slavery and genocide; it bravely and boldly does the opposite.
True, and some mural opponents have cluelessly missed that point. But the issue is that students object to seeing this depiction of their people as genocide victims or slaves in the front hall of their school, a place they’re required by law to be every school day of the year, and a place they pass through several times a day.
Students know those things happened. They see them in books and museums.
Yes, and they should. That’s not the same as seeing them looming over the front hall of their school. I floated a hypothetical example – what if a feminist anti-rape artwork depicting women entirely as victims of rape and oppression were prominently displayed in a public place where I was required to be most days of the year? (Or, since I’m 65 and presumably toughened, where young girls were required to be?) Or: There’s a jarring sculpted artwork depicting Holocaust victims outside S.F.’s Legion of Honor museum. Obviously, it’s a statement on the horrors of the Holocaust. But it raised controversy when it was installed, because it’s upsetting. Still, it’s at a museum. What if it were in a heavily used central public place where those who lost loved ones and ancestors in the Holocaust were unavoidably confronted with it daily?
Surveys show that only a small minority of the students wanted the mural covered or gone.
That’s true. Washington HS is largely Asian (because it’s in a heavily Asian neighborhood in a heavily Asian city); the students objecting to the mural are mostly black – now a tiny minority at Washington and in San Francisco overall – and among the very few Native Americans at the school. But in such a situation, should the minority be shouted down? (By the way, Washington used to have a far higher black population, because it was attended by kids from the Fillmore District to its east. The Fillmore, once a thriving black community, was decimated by “urban renewal” – sometimes called “Negro removal” – from the 1950s to the ’70s. So a 20th century act of aggressive racist oppression is the REASON there’s now a tiny number of black kids at Washington.)
In one discussion on Facebook, Victor Cherny, the art historian and expert on Arnautoff, in response to my calling out the insults and sneers at the students, chimed in, claiming that the Washington students objecting to the mural are young adults, not kids.
Sorry, that’s a seriously bad and false argument. They’re kids; don’t attack them, insult them and treat them with contempt.
Writer Karin Klein wrote an op-ed published in the Sacramento Bee on this issue that I thought made some solid points. (Yes, I know Klein used to be an L.A. Times editorial writer who used to promote education “reform” views, and then softened her opinion, or perhaps was given new leeway to soften her opinion. For now, I’m putting that aside.)
From Klein’s op-ed:
“At first, I was on their side [referring to those rising up to say don’t censor the mural]. The lack of freedom of speech on college campuses is deeply disturbing. I’m no fan of trigger warnings at colleges, either – the idea that professors should have to caution their students that there is potentially disturbing material ahead about war, or sexual assault, or suicide, and give them other assignments if they find the subject too troubling. …
“What makes the mural even more sympathetic to anti-censorship advocates is its message, which was progressive, and even daring, for its time. Created by a communist Russian-American artist, Victor Arnautoff, as one of the artistic works sponsored by the New Deal, it gives an unflattering image of George Washington as a slave owner and shows white colonists stepping over the dead body of a Native American. …
“A mural at a public school isn’t like a chapter in a history textbook, read, then tested, and, we hope, remembered for at least a while. It’s not the same as a field trip to a museum where students are exposed to thought-provoking and even disturbing images and, we’d hope, educated about them.
“Students are a captive audience. The kids enrolled at George Washington High School in San Francisco have no choice but to walk past that mural every day. It’s an enforced part of their environment. That means that the main image students see of African Americans is as slaves. Native American students are daily confronted with the image of a dead and disrespected Indian.
“Oh, kids are resilient! They don’t even notice those things, various friends said. Only a minority are bothered! …
“I, of course, wanted my own children and all their peers in school to know about the Holocaust. [Klein is Jewish.] I didn’t want them to shrink from the knowledge, or from artworks created from that horror. But I also wouldn’t want those images hanging over their heads all the time on the campus they’re legally required to attend.
“No amount of education and discussion would make the oppressiveness of that go away, just as a Vietnamese American student might find it horrifying to have to see images reminiscent of the My Lai massacre. Every. Single. Day. The examples go on. These students might be a very tiny minority at their schools, but that doesn’t make the images any more acceptable. In fact, it makes it worse – by singling them out.
“Think about atrocities committed against your ancestors that disturb you to this day, and what it would be like for your children to be forced to see those on a daily basis, singled out among all groups. And for those who can’t think of such atrocities in their family history, it might be best not to judge.
“Perhaps, one day, artists will create murals of our shame along the border, pulling children from their parents and locking them in terrifying, unhealthy prisons. I hope there are many such artworks. But those who get to stay in the United States shouldn’t be stuck having to live with the images of this awful moment haunting them every day in the place where they are trying to fit in.”
Link to Klein’s op-ed:
https://www.sacbee.com/opinion/california-forum/article232846267.html
The Holocaust memorial at S.F.’s Legion of Honor:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_Memorial_at_California_Palace_of_the_Legion_of_Honor
My language sounded like I was dissing the Washington Post for its story — I don’t really mean it that way. But I do think the article’s discussion of what happened in the ’60s has the tone of “the issue was already addressed and solved, so why are you bringing it up again?” That’s not a valid response, in my opinion.
I had never heard of this issue before, and the only thing I read was Diane’s post here (which I assume is the Washington Post article).
But I completely agree with your perspective and salute you for trying to engage people out there to see both sides. I came to the same conclusion you did just from reading the Washington Post article.
It is depressing how journalism has devolved into the most simplified debate, so I thought the Wash Post did a good job since I came out understanding (and being sympathetic to) both POVs. I didn’t notice the tone you mention. Perhaps I was so grateful to read a nuanced article on a subject that didn’t act as if there are simple answers that I overlooked it.
I’m going to read Klein’s op ed. She makes some excellent posts. As I said above, I can see both sides and they are both absolutely right.
Thanks for the respectful response!
I was recently a dinner with some old friends when this came up, and I meekly made my point that the students’ side should be heard and taken seriously. A really dear old friend looked at me with open disgust and actually turned away from me — turned her back, as though I’d said something absolutely unacceptable. (She warmed up again after the subject was rapidly dropped, my having killed it with my unspeakable opinion.)
That basically is the way the entire discussion has gone, including all the news coverage.
I’m wondering if Jewish students would be offended and outraged by a mural depicting a concentration camp.
Repeating that section from my comment above: There’s a jarring sculpted artwork depicting Holocaust victims outside S.F.’s Legion of Honor museum. Obviously, it’s a statement on the horrors of the Holocaust. But it raised controversy when it was installed, because it’s upsetting. Still, it’s at a museum. What if it were in a heavily used central public place where those who lost loved ones and ancestors in the Holocaust were unavoidably confronted with it daily?
And from Karin Klein’s commentary that I quoted: “I, of course, wanted my own children and all their peers in school to know about the Holocaust. [Klein is Jewish.] I didn’t want them to shrink from the knowledge, or from artworks created from that horror. But I also wouldn’t want those images hanging over their heads all the time on the campus they’re legally required to attend.
“No amount of education and discussion would make the oppressiveness of that go away, just as a Vietnamese American student might find it horrifying to have to see images reminiscent of the My Lai massacre. Every. Single. Day. The examples go on. These students might be a very tiny minority at their schools, but that doesn’t make the images any more acceptable. In fact, it makes it worse – by singling them out.
“Think about atrocities committed against your ancestors that disturb you to this day, and what it would be like for your children to be forced to see those on a daily basis, singled out among all groups. And for those who can’t think of such atrocities in their family history, it might be best not to judge.
Never again. Let me be strong enough to confront the atrocities done to the people in the past, no matter how painful it is. Adonai, let me never forget. Let me wake with it on my lips. Let me wear it on my face at noontime. Let me go to sleep with it on my mind. Every. Single. Day.
Imagine if a non-Jewish artist did a lifesize mural depicting Holocaust brutalities against Jews — including children — as art in a school with a small Jewish population.
Imagine if most students were perfectly fine with it but some Jewish students were bothered by having to look at it every day.
Imagine if those Jewish students were told, “shut up, this is art, this is your history and we have decided it is good for you to view it every day you enter this school.”
I don’t think Elie Wiesel would be on the side of “this is how we teach teens about the Holocaust and absolutely must be done to remember it because no other way will do so shut up.” I suspect he’d be on the side of the students.
Even the Holocaust Museum comes with warnings about which floors/exhibits might be too disturbing. There is no attitude that “anyone who doesn’t want to view those images just wants to cover up history.” It is a choice, and the choice to read about it and learn about it but perhaps not have to view life-size images of the brutality, especially every single day, is perfectly valid.
Would you feel differently if the artist was Elie Wiesel?
I wouldn’t tell anyone to shut up. I would love to talk to people who disagree with me and debate ideas without getting personal about it. Maybe I could influence some people’s opinions. Rarely does everyone come to agreement about anything, but we can make passionate arguments without insulting one another. Debating is more democratic.
In this thread, I describe the Holocaust memorial sculpture — a display representing a stylized death camp scene — outside the Legion of Honor art museum in San Francisco. It’s on public land, but not at all in a central location where many people go for day-to-day reasons. But there was still quite an outcry when it was first installed, in the ’80s, about how graphic it is.
Good. Graphic is much more appropriate than sanitized.
Responding to Diane’s comment: “Would you feel differently if the artist was Elie Wiesel?”
From the NY Times, an op ed:
Art and the Holocaust: Trivializing Memory
By Elie Wiesel
June 11, 1989
“Auschwitz represents the negation and failure of human progress; it negates the human design and casts doubts on its validity. Then, it defeated culture; later, it defeated art, because just as no one could imagine Auschwitz before Auschwitz, no one can now retell Auschwitz after Auschwitz. The truth of Auschwitz remains hidden in its ashes. Only those who lived it in their flesh and in their minds can possibly transform their experience into knowledge. Others, despite their best intentions, can never do so. Such, then, is the victory of the executioner: by raising his crimes to a level beyond the imagining and understanding of men, he planned to deprive his victims of any hope of sharing their monstrous meaning with others. In the tale of a survivor that appeared some 20 years ago, an S.S. officer tells a young Jew, ”One day you will speak of all this, but your story will fall on deaf ears. Some will mock you, others will try to redeem themselves through you. You will cry out to the heavens and they will refuse to listen or to believe . . . . You will possess the truth, but it will be the truth of a madman.”
But not even the killers ever imagined that there could come a time when the merchants of images and the brokers of language would set themselves up to speak for the victims…….
…….But then, the ”experts” will ask, how do we transmit the message? There are other ways to do it, better ways to keep the memory alive. Today the question is not what to transmit, but how. Study the texts – such as the diaries of Emanuel Ringelblum and Chaim Kaplan; the works by the historians Raul Hilberg, Lucy Davidowicz, Martin Gilbert, Michael Marrus. Watch the documentaries – such as Alain Resnais’s ”Night and Fog,” Claude Lanzmann’s ”Shoah” and Haim Gouri’s ”81st Blow.” Listen to the survivors and respect their wounded sensibility. Open yourselves to their scarred memory, and mingle your tears with theirs.
And stop insulting the dead.”
“I’m wondering if Jewish students would be offended and outraged by a mural depicting a concentration camp.”
Churches, many religious schools show pictures and sculptures of Jesus nailed to the cross. Does anybody think about all the kids seeing those truly brutal and offensive art works?
Here is a Sunday school lesson titled “Preschool Bible Lesson: Jesus is Crucified”
This particular lesson is from passages in Mark 15 where Jesus is on killed on a cross. This can be a sensitive and scary concept for younger children. Even so, it’s important to know how much it cost Jesus to pay for the sins of his people and earn perfect forgiveness for all his followers.
https://ministry-to-children.com/jesus-is-crucified-preschool-lesson/
I wonder of those objecting the mural would find nothing wrong with having their 5-year old attend this Sunday school.
Here is the mural, btw
Mate,
Don’t give them any ideas!
Mate,
Thank you very much for posting the image of the mural. I can see how it is impossible to remove it.
Even after perusing it for a while, it seemed like a mural even MAGA folks would love. Especially that MAGA folks would love. The subversive message is very subtle and even as an adult I would have definitely missed it. I also would probably not have noticed that the only non-white people seem to be the two shirtless Native Americans carrying large crates (the white men all have shirts) and I would probably have missed the person being stomped among so many adoring people cheering on Gen. Washington, who looks heroic — admired and yet humble — in the way that most MAGA folks believe is proper.
I don’t think it is entirely fair to compare an image or piece of art in a church or synagogue with one in a public school. Art in churches and synagogues are like art in museums and one can choose to view or not to view, to attend that church or not to attend it. That is different than a public school.
The mural doesn’t bother me, but I would not be thrilled if my kid’s public school had a painting that showed a graphic depiction of Jesus being crucified, especially if it included an image of a stereotypical Jew in the background.
Having those images in private houses of worship is fine. Even museums. In schools the issues become more complex and hopefully there is understanding of both sides’ perspective rather than making fun or calling one side snowflakes.
Of course, frescos can always be removed from the wall.
NYC Public School Parent summed this up well, noting that some commenters (everywhere, not just here) are “equating displaying (nor not displaying) art that depicts upsetting violations of oppressed peoples as wanting to cover up the teaching and learning and history of that oppression. But they are two separate issues. I think we all agree we should teach that history in the classroom and that would include images of the oppression, but the disagreement is about whether the mural needs to remain displayed as “art” in a space where students who are the descendants of those oppressed people see it every day.”
It’s a beautiful work (as a longtime volunteer in SFUSD schools, I’ve been in and out of Washington HS a number of times) and it should be treasured and preserved. But it’s a genuine dilemma because of the location (and prominence) of the mural. It’s painted directly on the plaster and can’t be moved.
“It’s painted directly on the plaster and can’t be moved.”
Have you seen the video?
“I would not be thrilled if my kid’s public school had a painting that showed a graphic depiction of Jesus being crucified”
What if the artist is Michelangelo?
I’ve seen the original, as a longtime San Francisco school volunteer who has been in and out of Washington HS a number of times. Art experts say it can’t be moved.
In any case, all I’m calling for is to hear and respect the students’ point of view.
“In any case, all I’m calling for is to hear and respect the students’ point of view.”
ditto!
It of course is possibel that students couldn’t care less about the painting until adults called their attention to it and then egged them on.
Personally, I am surprised that the school ever allowed such a gigantic painting dominate the school. Schools should be dominated by kids and their work: art, science, writings.
To me, the painting by no means appears to be a quality 20th century work. It reminds me of Bosch, but he worked 400+ years earlier.
” I’m always hit with arguments that don’t fully address the issue…” Such a critical truth about this and so much else, especially in education. It becomes so very wearing (years and years of this) while the arguments loudly continue, but full understanding on the part of those who argue is not considered useful or even relevant.
Still on the wrong side of history on this issue Diane. 18,500+ Black folks want to see this mural painted down. https://iam.colorofchange.org/petitions/take-down-washington-high-school-s-racist-mural
Teachers for Social Justice & 350+ educators want it painted down. https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdEnBtw_htBGGG6NKwUqDkvWWHQBcSpCp-Rc0w-xuRJ9iBg9w/viewform
You say the gap is generational but ignore that the biggest most blinding difference between those who are protecting racist murals & those who are listening to youth of color & Indigenous youth is race. School board meetings have been packed with older white folks for the mural with a handful of people of color & almost entirely younger people of color with a handful of white allies for youth.
You left out the harmful and inaccurate stereotypes & “history” that damage indigenous youth & create implicit bias in indigenous youth. To educate yourself further:
“Listening to Indigenous and Black students and families, and having my own conversations about implicit bias has helped me better understand why the murals are not just “about racism,” as many folks claim. The murals are actually teaching harmful ideas about Black and Indigenous communities, thus perpetuating the very racism they purportedly expose.“ https://medium.com/@AliMCollins/lets-talk-about-the-stereotypes-in-the-washington-murals-93912905c93c
Debbie Reese has also weighed in on this issue.
https://mobile.twitter.com/debreese/status/1159393746766745601
Thank you for this extended recycling of a report from the Washington Post. The technical details about the medium and circumstances surrounding the creation of the murals (plural) should be taken as lessons about mural making and why some expertise should have been mustered early in this controversy. Only two of the murals are the subject of this controversy.
If the murals have been in place since the 1930s, why has the controversy surfaced now, and what efforts EVER have been made to educate the students, administrators, school board and community about these murals…and any other legacies–murals or otherwise–from the Works Progress Administration, in San Francisco? San Francisco has more than one mural created in the 1930s and an incredible array of so-called community-or street art murals with potent imagery that students and familities and workers in some neighborhoods see every..single…day. https://ncac.org/news/san-francisco-mural-controversy-perspectives There is abundant scholarship about WPA projects in San Francisco including the work of art historian Robert W. Cherny, who has written ten about the artist: “Victor Arnautoff and the Politics of Art (2017) University of Illinois Press, Working Class in American History Series.
After reading the following recent “Resolution to Adopt the Declaration of the Rights of All Students to Equity and Access to Arts Learning” on behalf of the San Francisco Unified School District, it is not clear that policy-makers have the capacity to address the content or policy issues bearing on this mural, or more generally studies in the arts and humanities.
The slogans here are thick (arts education to prepare students for college career, and life) and notably assertive about keeping and upgrading instrumental music including instrument repair, maintenance, and purchase.
The resolution is vague on PK-5 arts education but quite clear that arts education is to be viewed as an elective in middle and high schools. This is muddy thinking and esucationese on paper: The Resolution is probably on file. It ended with some anticipated amendments about funding and responding to collective bargaining agreements.
Click to access 195-28A1%20Rights%20of%20all%20students%20to%20Arts%20Learning%20.pdf
I think that this issue cannot be resolved to the satisfaction of all parties. Missing from any reporting that I have seen is the voice of the art teacher–if the school even has one, or a community of high school art teachers.
As others have noted, there is a difference between the unavoidable encounters with these murals in school with a noteworthy absence of any interpretive supports, and encountering provocative works in a other public settings.
I wonder if the school board will move to prohibit classroom discussions of the New York Times essays, poems, and photographs gathered as part of it’s 1619 Project. It is a “woke” version of histories neglected in school, with close examination of the slave trade (including Native Americans). The intent is to revealing contractions between a preferred narrative for our nation’s founding and some brutal facts.
I find myself debating on the murals even though I totally oppose removing or destroying them.
My point is that the students who raised the issue should be listened to thoughtfully and respected, and too many voices sneer at them or at least blow them off. Some points:
Laura asks: If the murals have been in place since the 1930s, why has the controversy surfaced now?
The Washington Post story points out that the controversy surfaced in the ’60s too. But in any case, implying that the case isn’t valid because no one raised the issue before is problematic. Think of all the areas you could apply that to: Black Lives Matter, #MeToo, LGBTQ rights, equal rights for women, environmentalism — on and on. The 1619 Project is entirely based on raising issues in a way they haven’t been raised before.
Yes, there are community murals and street art all around San Francisco, with potent imagery. That still doesn’t really compare to this specific situation — images of a specific race being killed, exploited and/or degraded, in the front hall of a public school.
Yes, GWHS has arts teachers, and SFUSD has strong arts programs. My kids both graduated from the district’s public arts high school, Ruth Asawa School of the Arts. I don’t know if the school’s art teachers have weighed in on the issue, but I can see why they might not want to, either — disagree with the school board or take a controversial position that’s guaranteed to get them attacked nationwide? They shouldn’t be forced to state a position, obviously.
This comment indicates understanding of the situation:
“there is a difference between the unavoidable encounters with these murals in school … and encountering provocative works in a other public settings.”
But then this one is not very helpful:
“I wonder if the school board will move to prohibit classroom discussions of the New York Times essays, poems, and photographs gathered as part of it’s 1619 Project.”
The issue is the unavoidable encounters (multiple times every school day) with the images in the front hall of the school. Obviously that’s an entirely different thing from classroom discussions.
As I say, I vigorously oppose destroying or removing the murals. I’m torn about the question of covering them. I just think the discussion should be thoughtful and respect the perspective of the students who raised the issue.
Unavoidable encounters with the murals shouldn’t be such a problem if the students know what they’re looking at. Do they? I don’t mean it as a criticism of the students but instead of the adults.
The students say they’re well aware of what they’re looking at, and that they understand what Arnautoff’s point was. But what black and Native American students say they see is that the only imagery of their own people is as victims of genocide and slavery — and that even though the purpose is to show the evil of genocide and slavery, it’s oppressive to see that in their casual everyday gathering place.
I hear them and I understand what they’re saying, but I think the students need better support and better strategies for coping with and opposing the racism that is in every public and private space every day than to try to hide it or hide from it.
Los Angeles Unified developed a program called AEMP, the Academic English Mastery Program, consisting of “instructional strategies that facilitate the acquisition of standard and academic English in classroom environments that validate, value, and build upon the language and culture of [African American, Mexican American, Hawaiian American, and American Indian] students.” Having attended a number of AEMP professional development sessions over the last twenty years, my impression is that validating and valuing the language and culture of African American students is often construed as always and only portraying African Americans in a way that builds their self esteem, as African Americans struggle in school and in life because of a lack of self esteem systematically ingrained over the course of four hundred years of slavery, Jim Crow, and modern racism. Hard to argue with that! Makes sense.
But what do I do as a U.S. history teacher when my African American students complain that reading Frederick Douglass’ autobiographical account of slavery is making them uncomfortable? Stop reading about slavery? Should I skip that part of history? Should they not be taught that slavery was horrendous? Not be taught what was done to people after the Reconstruction? Teach only about abolition and civil rights heroes without teaching why they fought?
I tend to think that in order to fulfill my mission as an educator, and build civic awareness and responsibility in my students to create a better future for them, I need to show them the whole story. Even when it hurts to look. We have to look because the struggle for justice and equality continues today and will continue in the future. We can’t be too satisfied with ourselves or our condition. It’s rarely easy to look at United States history, but it’s necessary. Let the murals be seen and studied.
Do you really not see the false equivalency here?
Is anyone saying the murals can’t be studied? Or “seen”? Your analogy to requiring students to read Frederick Douglas or George Washington Carver (or do you have a double standard there?) even if “makes them uncomfortable” is completely separate from having large murals displaying some of the historical brutal “realities” you wish them to face every day of their lives.
FYI – Jewish teens study the Holocaust quite often, but that doesn’t mean that there is serious consideration about having all of them forced to spend lots of time viewing the images of the starved naked bodies of Jewish men, women and children in mass graves. If there was a large mural that every student in a large public high school with a 10% Jewish population that depicted the naked bodies of those people in mass graves, and some Jewish students were bothered by this, I suspect it would be taken a little more seriously than chiding them and their parents as snowflakes who want to hide the brutal history of Jews.
The idea that the “only way to show them the whole story” is to make sure they have to look at those images displayed every single day seems rather privileged. Not having those images displayed prominently in front of them every day does not mean that they cannot be taught of their history, and there is a difference between viewing images in the context of a classroom slideshow or in a book and having to see them every day displayed in a huge mural.
That doesn’t mean I want the murals destroyed or even necessarily covered up. What I do expect is that people try to understand both points of view when there is no clear right or wrong.
I do not understand how you could possibly equate having those murals covered up with some demand that the brutalities of slavery must never be studied in your classroom and those images cannot ever be seen.
I understand that I am making a generalization. Two things: Frederick Douglass’ slaveholders were brutal and The Narrative Life of Frederick Douglass is a harrowing read; and I have been shown images of heaps of naked, emaciated Jewish corpses since I was nine years old. I do not regret it. When students painted swastikas on my door, the principal showed them those images to help them understand what they were really supporting. They hadn’t known. Everyone should see the pictures. I am generalizing that listening to people’s fears is appropriate, but it’s imperative to help people confront their fears instead of running from them.
I don’t know of many synagogues that have pieces of art that graphically depict the dying men, women and children in the Holocaust on display in their sanctuaries. I don’t even know of any who have those depictions displayed in the hallways of their religious school classrooms.
That doesn’t mean that those synagogues are not teaching about and showing images of those horrors that were done to Jews.
I certainly remember learning about them and being shown images. And yet there wasn’t a synagogue in my community that had those images on permanent public display so that the religious school children could see them every day to “learn”.
The reason that every synagogue does not prominently and permanently display art depicting the tragedies Jews experienced has nothing to do with not confronting fears. If you know of any Jewish high schools that prominently display art that depicts the victims of the Holocaust, I would be curious to see such large art works that are designed for the students’ learning. The many, many synagogues and jewish day schools that do not have such large art works on permanent display are not “running away from their fears”.
In synagogue, we study Torah, Jewish law. Thou shalt not kill… that sort of thing. Very good stuff. I recommend it.
“In synagogue, we study Torah, Jewish law. Thou shalt not kill… that sort of thing.”
Exactly! You can study lots of important ideas in synagogue even if there are no graphic murals depicting Jews being treated like they are less than human.
Dude.
Arnautoff was a family friend of a good friend of mine. He lived on Potrero Hill in San Francisco, and was a Communist. His murals inside Coit Tower came in for a lot of criticism because of his obvious political bent. By wanting to cover up the murals, the performatively woke San Francisco school board is doing what the Rockefeller family did to Diego Rivera’s work for them. Everyone needs to study American history, art history, and how to critique. It was very bold for Arnautoff to paint such a picture, instead of the usual whitewashed hagiography of the Father of Our Country. I do feel for the young people who are objecting to the mural, but I still think education is the answer. I also think much of out history is in danger of disappearing. Most people don’t understand the extent to which slavery was the basis of our country’s entire economy.
“At a school board meeting, one female student shouted, “It seems to me you people keep reminding us that we were once slaves!”
This mural depicts factual history. If you cover the historical depiction, it does not erase the historical facts. Maybe that young lady’s relatives were slaves, maybe not. There is no absolute way of knowing. But that mural in no way tells those students that they were once slaves. Slaves were part of the way of life in many parts of the colonies and the US. You can’t erase or cover that up.
Shall we erase all bad historical facts in the US history? Would that make everyone feel better?
It’s mocking and disparaging the students to sneeringly ask if we should erase all bad historical facts, and that’s what I’m calling for people to stop doing in this discussion.
As LeftCoastTeacher @ August 31, 2019 at 5:48 pm stated:
“I hear them and I understand what they’re saying, but I think the students need better support and better strategies for coping with and opposing the racism that is in every public and private space every day than to try to hide it or hide from it.”
It is not disparaging them. It is bringing the conversation to a debate. You can’t just take away or hide something because one person, group, crowd, etc does not like it or is upset by it.
The mural depicts what was accepted in society at that time. Society has changed its thinking. Laws have been created and changed since then.
“You can’t just take away or hide something because one person, group, crowd, etc does not like it or is upset by it.”
That is exactly what the far right racists say about statues honoring Civil War heroes or Christopher Columbus.
This has been a stimulating discussion. I get excited when history becomes a part of a debate, whether it be southern statues of confederates or Napoleon (dictator or spreader of revolutionary ideals?). Rommel came to the United States to study Nathen Bedford Forrest not because he was a white supremacist (everybody was so in that day except for Fredrick Douglas and maybe Thaddeus Stephens) but because he was a brilliant military strategist. Rommel was obviously a white supremacist, but that is not why he came to study Forrest. It was his use of cavalry in battle.
The complexity of history is that the reasons for admiration of people runs counter to the factual nature of the profession. Historians are interested in facts and their truth. Historians are motivated by the moral implications of their findings. Laymen, the discription of all the students in the camp of those who want the mural gone, must be taught to interpret the material culture that is a part of the art of an era. Otherwise we get a consistent misunderstanding of the historian’s craft.
This artist, by virtue of the fact that he was a Marxist, was a historian. His work is a peculiar interpretation to the history of European exploitation of the world during the age of European dominance. It has value as a unique statement about history and an interpretation from a particular point of view. If it sits in front of a student body that is not educated on what it was doing there, then the state needs to give the school room to explain its history. You may destroy history, but you do so at the risk of destroying truth, for truth in history is formed by everything people say about it. Since history is stories about the past, preserving all the stories makes getting at the truth more probable, even when these stories are fabricated or mis-informed.
Yes.
Thanks for speaking to the importance of history. It can be buried, covered, hidden..but it is still there.
Roy,
Are you saying that the best way to address all the people who want to take down prominent public art depicting Christopher Columbus or Confederate Civil War generals is to leave it in place but perhaps include a plaque that gives some context?
I think in this case the students who objected absolutely want the history to be told — the last thing they would want to do is fabricate it or cover it up. But it seems that is a separate issue from whether or not having certain types of artwork displayed in a public space – especially in a school where students must see it every day – can be offensive to people and how to address those concerns.
One of the possible compromises suggested when the subject was the prominent display of civil war general monuments or Columbus statues was to move them into a museum. Not destroy them. I know that is not possible with these permanent murals.
Art isn’t history. To me, the real debate isn’t not whether art should exist — of course it should and not be destroyed. The debate is about where the original piece of art should sit.
If the city made 100,000 posters of the mural, or 1,000,000 posters so that people all over the world could hang the reproduction in their home, but they decide to not have it permanently displayed in the school hallway, is that really censorship? Is it really destroying history? Or is it simply being sensitive to people who are want the history told, but are bothered by having to look at the visual depiction of their ancestors’ suffering every single day because they have no choice.
So it is a sleepless night with a case of hay fever. Please forgive the midnight rambling hereafter. NYC, I see your points, and understand how people feel about certain pieces of art. You got me to thinking about other art that has been destroyed in history.
The first thing that came to mind was the iconoclast movement during the Byzantine Empire. Crowds tore up icons in churches because they were offended by them.
Unconnected is the apparently purposeful burial of the temple at Catalhoyuk (sorry for the lack of special characters in the spelling).
Still farther afield is the destroying of the Buddas in Afghanistan by the Taliban.
Of course there is the Nazi destruction of the artists work they detested in the period before the Second World War.
We should also recall the pulling down of statues of Stalin in the wake of the end of the Soviet Union, the same for Sadam Hussien after the fall of Iraq, and I am certainly failing to mention a few more.
When we first discussed this week’s ago, I wondered how a school built so long ago could still function as a school effectively. It must have been the pride of a community to have been so well built as to be adequate so many years later. I have seen murals depicting historical things that were also painted as a part of the Federal Writers and Artist projects, but never in a school still functioning as a school.
I really do see why kids do not want to see their past trivialized with statements like “meet me at the dead Indian.” Given that, however, it seems to beg the question of why someone would have gone to the trouble to depict th scene, which would have stimulated some discussion of the various views of history that produced this image in the mind of one particular painter and how he came to paint it.
There are some debates that seem to depend on misunderstood fragments of history. Parts of Richard Wright’s Native Son, read by those who looked only at the literal text, might feel that Wright had created a victim in the protagonist, Bigger Thomas. They might protest that his representation by a white lawyer demeans his part of the race issue. But they would be sorely misrepresenting Richard Wright. Often Twain is censored for dialect in Huck Finn. Depictions in art and literature such as the wise but bucolic slave storyteller or the noble savage may be problematic, but are not central to the hostility that created racism and plagues us today in the form of radical xenophobia.
I have always been in favor of adding statues rather than subtracting them when the confederate statue thing comes up. Instead of pulling down Sadam Hussien, I would have erected an addedum tomthe statue of several figures he victimized running him through with swords, or pulling him down with ropes to imortalize the moment his cruel regime was toppled.
Art changes as we look at it and as the March of history proceeds. This summer, there was a sculpture we saw in the a North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh. It had been designed to pay tribute to the Tuskegee Airmen, black pilots who fought in WWII. The figure was depicted with airplanes protruding from his body as though they had flown into him. Puzzled, I was reading about this sculpture and learned that the artist had perished in the attack in the World Trade Centers, making his art a tragic prediction of his own demise. (Sorry, I cannot recal the artist’s name)
I have a friend whose ancestor was a freed slave who fough for the Union. When his confederate master was wounded in battle, he received permission to leave and nurse him back to health. When he accomplished this, he returned to fight for the union and came back home after the war where he and his former master resumed farming together. True story or not, Joe believes it, and so do I. History has a way of being very complex. Art does too.
Who could ever hear the tune to the star spangled banner we sing without thinking about our words in the anthem? But it was an different bunch to words evoked in the minds of those who produced the notes two hundred years ago. Art changes. We should allow it to change. This mural may someday come down. That will be yet another part of history.
Thanks for the thoughtful reply! Very good points about art. For the record, I wrote the very first reply and tried to make it clear that I could understand both sides.
I thought the discussion here got off track (not with you) in somehow equating displaying (nor not displaying) art that depicts upsetting violations of oppressed peoples as wanting to cover up the teaching and learning and history of that oppression. But they are two separate issues. I think we all agree we should teach that history in the classroom and that would include images of the oppression, but the disagreement is about whether the mural needs to remain displayed as “art” in a space where students who are the descendants of those oppressed people see it every day. Hopefully everyone agrees that the murals shouldn’t be destroyed, even if they were in a different place.
Totally off topic, but Roy comments: “I wondered how a school built so long ago could still function as a school effectively. It must have been the pride of a community to have been so well built as to be adequate so many years later.”
The San Francisco school district has many older schools that are architectural gems. As with other public buildings, they were constructed at a time when as a society we revered our public institutions rather than reviling them. Washington HS can be seen from all over the western part of the city, a grand building on top of a hill.
Beautifully said, Caroline.
New York City also used to have elegant school buildings, most constructed in the 1920s.
One of them was Jamaica High School, which Bloomberg and Klein closed and broke up into six small schools. Now there are small schools dotting the city. The elegant buildings were treated as disposable.
I posted a New Yorker article here by staff writer Jelani Cobb about the past glory of Jamaica HS.
That was a time when the public believed that public schools should be beautiful.
The school my mother graduated from in Zebulon, NC remains a landmark but not a school. I have noticed the beautiful buildings in towns in the Great Plains, where generations of successful children have matriculated in the town’s most prominent architecture. Retired men carefully tend flower beds in front of the schools, which have sometimes become town museums as the population have continued to decline due to the mechanization of agriculture.
I have often criticized the standards movement and the prevalence of high stakes testing for the elimination of any curriculum unique to the local area. While it may not be important for students all over the United States to learn about the pencil industry in Shelbyville, TN, it seems vital to the understanding of that community, as serves as a quick lesson on industrialized America.
I‘d like to add one more opinion before I turn in. George Washington, while a badass major in King George’s army during the French and Indian War, was an indecisive general during the Revolutionary War and a stuffy president who aided industrialism over egalitarianism, not one of the best of history. So there.
Perhaps a good way to view this issue is to consider whether there is anything wrong with a high school’s required curriculum to include reading the Mark Twain novel Huckleberry Finn and what they would think about a group of students who did not want that novel to be required reading in their English class. There are legitimate arguments to be made for both POVs. And those who object to the book being required reading — even if there is a lot of “context” provided by the teacher — are not necessarily demanding that the book be destroyed nor even that students couldn’t read it as an option among many books. They are asking that it stop being something that students should be required to read because someone with more power decides that their concerns aren’t valid or can be addressed while having them required to read the book.
These kinds of issues generally have two sides and neither of those sides is necessarily “wrong”.
Read about Huck Finn in my book The Language Police.
Diane, since you’re a fan of frank, direct language: telling Indigenous people they shouldn’t be offended by 1930s racist stereotypes of Native Americans and that it is ok for other children to subliminally absorb the messages behind those racist stereotypes is the textbook definition of whitesplaining.
It’s so amazingly arrogant for white people to tell Black people what kind of art is best for them.
Are you suggesting that Black people can comment only on art by other Black people?
Notice you didn’t get a straight answer to your question.
The principle here is that one does not speak as a “person,” but as a “white person,” or a “white woman,” or a “straight/gay white woman,” and so on, and that the validity of your utterances is limited by the lived and historical experiences of your intersectional identity.
I assume that under this principle of Identity, I am allowed to comment only on art, history, and events pertaining to those who are white, female, Jewish, born in Texas, large family, and about my age.
I think there might be about a dozen people in the world who match my identity. Maybe none. That silences me.
Apples to oranges comparison because you can open and close a book. The school makes children walk by this racist mural every time they walk into school.
Would you want to work in a place that had art with racist stereotypes?
Keeping it real: I don’t need to read a book written by a white person who tells Black people how they should feel. I’ll read Angela Davis instead, thank you.
You consistently write Black with capital B and white with lower case w.
Diane, we have lots of woke white people here in SF who think that the murals need to go.
Do you actually realize that there are racist stereotypes of Native Americans in that painting?
Would racist stereotypes of Jewish/Muslim/Latinx/(the list goes on) people be ok in a public school setting?
Saying that it’s ok to have racist stereotypes of people in a school because it’s “art!!!” is racism with the pinky finger up.
I also don’t appreciate the dog whistle racist tropes of Black & Indigenous people whom this racist art insults as “Nazis” and “the Taliban.” That is just gross.
Many here are in favor of local control over education. Surely that includes the artwork in the school. Should we not trust the local school board to do what is right for the local community?
Come on, TE. What if the Vatican decided to overpaint all those naked figures in the Last Judgment in the Sistine chapel? Should it be their decision only?
Let’s face it, it’s very difficult o claim that artworks are owned by anybody—even if they paid for it.
It is even more difficult to claim that the local school district owns the students who live in the district. Perhaps this is an argument against local control and in favor of higher levels of governance setting policies in the schools, including determining the media students are required to view on a daily basis.
Mate,
Arguing with TE is fruitless. He never concedes a point, always has the last word, likes to argue.
I can see it from his meritless reply.
I’m saying that when a LOT of Black and Indigenous people say that art has racist stereotypes of Black and Indigenous people is insulting, white people need to listen.
Sometimes symbols of oppression are invisible to those who benefit them.
#StayInYourLane
I’m just wondering, Diane, why you think art with racist stereotypes is ok to have at a school?
I was at all three school board meetings when this was discussed. At the last two, there were mural supporters shouting and disrupting our Native American prayer circle.
A male pastor from a conservative denomination was yelling at a soft-spoken woman who was a Native American elder and telling her she needed to go to his church.
It was one of the grossest things I’d ever seen.
You can comment on whatever you want. But if you don’t do your research you’ll wind up not sounding very credible.